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The International Dimension of EU Competition Law and Policy
A discussion of the EU's role in the internationalisation of competition law.
Anestis S. Papadopoulos (Author)
9780521196468, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 28 October 2010
362 pages, 12 tables
23.5 x 16 x 2.1 cm, 0.7 kg
'Most books on trade and competition issues rest at the level of rhetoric. Papadopoulos goes the extra several miles: his analysis of competition provisions in trade and regional agreements will help experts, negotiators and counsel make sense of a growing network of networks. The coverage is encyclopaedic in scope yet detailed enough to offer incisive commentary and conclusions for policy, law and economic approaches to regulation.' Philip Marsden, Director, The Competition Law Forum and Senior Research Fellow, British Institute of International and Comparative Law
Modern competition law was first employed by countries over one hundred years ago in order to address issues relating to restrictions of trade at the national level. Recent international economic integration has weakened the distinction between the domestic and the international in several fields of economic activity, and consequently the laws which regulate such activity, competition law included. Several attempts to address the paradox of adopting national competition rules to address international issues have been made at the international, regional and (lately) bilateral levels. This book discusses the international dimension of EU competition law, and examines the position taken by the EU in four distinct categories of international agreements which are devoted to competition or include competition provisions. In particular, it analyses the EU's position with regard to bilateral enforcement cooperation agreements, bilateral free trade agreements, plurilateral-regional agreements and the long negotiations for the adoption of a multilateral competition regime.
1. Introduction, and structure of the book
2. The national and international dimensions of competition law and policy
3. Bilateral enforcement cooperation agreements
4. Bilateral trade agreements which include competition provisions
5. Plurilateral regional agreements which include competition provisions
6. The role of the EC in multilateral negotiations on competition
7. Conclusions.
Subject Areas: Competition law / Antitrust law [LNCH], Company, commercial & competition law [LNC]